Sentences with phrase «standardised test which»

The Trump administration has opted out of a global, standardised test which would assess whether school - age children can identify fake news.

Not exact matches

Our first study on guggul gum was a simple comparison test between the standardised extract, gugulipid, and tetracycline, which is one of the most common oral antibiotics against acne (which I recommend that you avoid).
Because many of the great studies on rhodiola rosea, whether it's for stress, energy or focus, tested rhodiola rosea which was standardised to 3 % rosavins.
All of them provide the students a context which shows greater relevance to their learning than simply passing a standardised test.
Sturgeon also confirmed that he National Improvement Framework would be published this week, which contains proposals for standardised national tests in Scotland.
The program plans to strengthen the school system through; «higher expectations of social responsibility; more time to be playful and creative in order to learn more effectively when in the classroom; fewer standardised tests; and less time in a classroom setting (although no less rigor of content), which will create more passion in students to learn and less burnout as a result of too much time in school.»
However, critics fear introducing any standardised assessment which compares pupils in different schools encourages teachers to «teach to the test».
The benefits would be twofold: not only would a standardised crash test procedure be introduced, but safety techniques already used in the world of motorsport would give real - world relevance to the sport - which might otherwise come under even greater scrutiny should another high - profile death occur.
Standard TA04 -08-01 outlines the importance of standardising prices against which companies should test.
Courts are increasingly looking to Experts to provide what they regard as scientific, validated assessments (usually through the use of standardised psychometric tests) to identify psychological factors that may underpin the child or young person's special educational needs: «needs» which are often evidenced by underachievement, disaffection or social exclusion amongst these groups of vulnerable young people.
The belief that education is all about getting good marks and scoring high on standardised tests has hijacked what many experts say should be a complementary goal: helping students build a strong, positive psychological and social foundation on which they can build a successful life.
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